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Plank, Stephen B.; Bradshaw, Catherine P.; Young, Hollie – American Journal of Education, 2009
This article considers school climate and perceptions of social disorder. When a school is characterized by disorder or physical risk, basic educational goals and processes are jeopardized. We use survey data from 33 public schools serving grades 6-8 in a large mid-Atlantic city to examine relationships among physical disorder (e.g., broken…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Public Schools, School Surveys, Urban Schools
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Allsup, Randall Everett – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2009
People live, unarguably, in a violent world: in hard times, of dark days and nights. In this essay, the author asks the questions, what does it mean to live in an age of perpetual war? How do people make sense of everyday violence? How is it symbolically enacted? How is it sublimated and transcended? This essay also looks broadly at the meaning of…
Descriptors: Violence, War, Quality of Life, Social Problems
Zoeller, Geoffrey W., Jr. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Education in a free society requires that students are provided with a provocative and thoughtful curriculum and learning materials that will prepare them to function as productive adult citizens in a diverse and changing world. Textbooks and curricular materials that engage the rising generation in the study of social ideas, problems, and issues…
Descriptors: Social Problems, Textbooks, Printed Materials, Democracy
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Walton, Gerald – Journal of Education Policy, 2010
James Scheurich argues that practices of policy--normalized over time through repetition--serve three purposes. They structure social problems for which policy is designed to address; construct certain people, implicitly or explicitly, as problem individuals; and shape policy solutions. Following Foucault, he offers what he calls Policy…
Descriptors: Social Problems, Bullying, Archaeology, Policy Analysis
Waldron-Moore, Pamela; Jacobs, Leslie R. – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2010
Of all the social constructs impacting the contemporary world, gender is perhaps the most pervasive and the most insidious. Its inequities creep into our everyday lives with impunity. Across the globe, gender construction has evoked challenge, undergone reform and, in some instances, transformed thinking in societies. Yet, for all the gains made…
Descriptors: Females, Employment Opportunities, Sex Fairness, Higher Education
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Welsh, Paul J. – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2010
The paper opens with a discussion of some of the methodological difficulties inherent in comparative educational research, and outlines ways in which systemic inequalities in doing comparative work can be reduced. The social circumstances in Thanet and Lille are delineated, and the paper then considers structural differences in denominational…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Social Problems, Comparative Analysis, Educational Policy
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Fiske, Jo-Anne; Belanger, Yale D.; Gregory, David – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2010
Confrontations between urban neighborhoods and activist organizations seeking affordable housing and shelter for the homeless are attracting the increased attention of academics and policy makers. Perceived as a problem to be resolved, and constituted as a "syndrome," the social phenomenon "not in my backyard" (NIMBY) is…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Social Problems, Citizenship, Homeless People
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Alexiadou, Nafsika – Education Inquiry, 2011
This article reviews the changing relationships between education policies and their links to social disadvantage and conceptions of school leadership. The argument is that definitions of leadership evolve as the assumptions underpinning the relationships between society, the economy and education institutions change. The article draws on the case…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Instructional Leadership, Role of Education, Educational History
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Wimberley, Ronald C. – Social Forces, 2008
Sociology with a Southern face characterizes Southern sociologists and Southern social issues. This article asks why we are sociologists and what we are doing about it in the South. I posit that many Southern sociologists share common biographical experiences that provide insights for understanding and solving Southern problems. Longstanding…
Descriptors: Social Problems, Sociology, Biographies, Well Being
Field, John – Adults Learning, 2008
Due to the effects of global warming, writes Field, everyone now lives in times of plague, floods, and famine. While the UK government's track record on green issues is not all bad, still it is vulnerable to criticism. In this article, the author discusses what adult education has to offer to the environmental movement, despite existing…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Environmental Education, Social Problems, Conservation (Environment)
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Oude Breuil, Brenda Carina – Children & Society, 2008
This article examines how implicit notions in the concepts of "children" and "home" influence the study of child trafficking. Where children and adults are often presented as oppositional categories, home is regarded as territorialised, essentialised and unchangeable. These social constructions oversimplify trafficked and…
Descriptors: Children, Foreign Countries, Child Welfare, Crime
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France, Alan – Journal of Youth Studies, 2008
This paper is concerned with exploring how in late modernity the "youth question" is being addressed by public policy and what impact this is having on understandings of childhood and youth. Historically the youth question has been shaped by adult anxieties over youth delinquency and their problems of social integration. In late modernity, this is…
Descriptors: Social Problems, Social Integration, Prevention, Risk
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Huston, Aletha C. – Child Development, 2008
Although science policy and social policy have distinct cultures, there are overlapping influences on both. Science policy decisions across the spectrum of basic and applied research are influenced by perceived social utility and the potential for solving current social problems. With the advent of evidence-based policy requirements, social…
Descriptors: Social Problems, Intervention, Public Policy, Scientific Research
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Syrnyk, Corinne – British Journal of Special Education, 2012
The nurture approach is a form of educational intervention for children with social, emotional and behavioural difficulties (SEBD). Utilising a unique example of a state-run, special "nurturing" primary school, Corinne Syrnyk, of St Mary's University College, Calgary, presents a case study of the experience of being a "nurture…
Descriptors: Teacher Characteristics, Teacher Education, Intervention, Emotional Problems
Friedman-Krauss, Allison; Barnett, W. Steven – National Institute for Early Education Research, 2013
The potential health benefits of early childhood education programs are quite large, especially for children living in poverty. In this report, authors Allison Friedman-Krauss and Steve Barnett set out the evidence regarding the short and long term health benefits to children from early childhood education programs, identify the features of…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Preschool Education, Child Health, Health Promotion
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